66 MY SHRUBS 



I know of no dwarf Larix^ but, if one exists, should dearly 

 like to add it to my miniature forest. The only deciduous dwarf 

 in that absurd grove is Betula. All larches are exquisite, but so 

 swift is their growth that after a few years they occupy far more 

 room in a small garden than can be spared. I have always a 

 larch growing here, but its activities are called to cease long 

 before it reaches maturity. 



Lasiandra macraniha is a noteworthy Brazilian which thrives 

 in snug Cornish gardens, but needs a cold house at Kew. 

 The shrub has beautiful foliage and brilliant blue flowers in 

 late autumn. Few gardeners can count upon success with this 

 valuable plant in the open; but all should grow it under 

 cover. It is often called Pleroma macranthuniy and at Kew 

 it manages somehow to prosper as Tihouchina Semidecandra. 

 Please tell me where one may procure this noble shrub, for I 

 know not. 



Of the laurels I grow but few, and best I like Laurus camphor a y 

 the camphor laurel. It would seem that this should be referred 

 to Cinnamomum, and grown in a cold house ; but my specimen 

 against a south wall has now ascended to ten feet, and stood some 

 harsh weather without faltering as L, camphor a. It is a very 

 beautiful Japan shrub, saturated with camphor in all its parts. L, 

 nohilis is a common weed in this region, and the wild pigeons 

 come for the berries during autumn. But many escape them, and 

 seedlings of the sweet bay are grubbed up every year in hundreds. 

 L. nohilis regalis is a fragrant dwarf variety that promises well. 

 L. Sassafras officinale makes a good, but not a showy shrub. The 

 leaves take strange shapes sometimes. In Virginia they manu- 

 facture beer of the young shoots, and perfumers use an oil ex- 



